Tinder is about to mature as part of a public company, but the same might not be said of its 29-year-old chief executive.

Tinder CEO Sean Rad gave a personal account of his dating and sex history, talked about his overbearing mom, flaunted how rich he is, and self-diagnosed himself with obsessive compulsive disorder in an interview published Wednesday with the U.K.’s Evening Standard. He also claimed that at least one famous supermodel is begging him for sex, but that he hasn’t given in to her because she’s not intellectually stimulating enough.

Tinder’s head of communications, Rosette Pambakian, who accompanied Rad to the Standard Evening interview, declined to comment Wednesday afternoon on the interview nor the negative reactions it has since triggered in the media. In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission Wednesday night, Match said it did not approve nor condone the interview.

“Mr. Rad is not a director or executive officer of the company and was not authorized to make statement on behalf of the company for purposes of the article,” Match said.

In total, the article included Rad talking on nine topics that could make a solid primer for things CEOs should avoid discussing in interviews.

Penises: While Tinder has been criticized for the tendency of some of its male users to send pictures of their body parts, including penises, to their female matches, Rad was sure to clarify that he is not a penis guy. “I do not condone penis pictures — that is just NOT who I am,” he reportedly said.

How rich you are: While the Evening Standard’s Charlotte Edwardes concluded in her article after a sit-down with Rad that he has been “too busy for extravagance,” the CEO showed up to the interview wearing a gold Audemars Piguet watch, which can retail in the tens of thousands of dollars. He also reportedly owns a $115,000 black Mercedes G-Class SUV. But when he gets even richer, after the float of the company he co-founded, Rad plans to start an art collection, according to the Standard.

How super models want you: Don’t you just hate when supermodels hang all over you? Rad does, apparently. Rad tells the Evening Standard that a supermodel, “someone really, really famous,” has been “begging” him for sex. But he’s been all, “like, no.” Cool, bro.

Your sexual preferences: Rad prefers girls who are smart, and who his friends think are ugly, according to the Standard. The CEO tells the publication that he needs an “intellectual challenge” and has been attracted to women “who are ... well, who my friends might think are ugly,” he said. He also divulged in the interview that he has slept with around 20 women and lost his virginity at the age of 17. He referred to his childhood self as a “sweet, naughty kid.”

Sodomy, even if mistakenly: Make sure you freshen up on your vocab words before an interview, execs. When trying to say that some women are attracted to intelligence — the term is sapiosexuality — Rad instead used the word “sodomy.” When he realized the definition of sodomy through a mobile search, he quickly recovered, saying: “What? No, not that. That’s definitely not me. Oh, my God.”

Your potential psychological disorders: When recounting a recent vacation with his mother, he admits to wanting to flee the scene after witnessing her make-up in the bathroom. “I have OCD,” he reportedly said in defense, referring to obsessive-compulsive disorder.

The phone-call limits you’ve set with your mom: The sweet part of the story is that Rad talks to his mom every day. The less-sweet side is that he has set a phone-call messaging system (one call means just checking up, while three calls means someone is on the verge of death), according to the Standard.

The background checks you’ve done on journalists: While talking to a journalist, Rad declared that “too many” journalists are just in it for fame. He’s still upset about the September Vanity Fair article that exposed the shallow dating lives of 20-something Tinder users in New York City (remember, that sparked an elementary tweet storm from the company), but said that he has done his own “background research” on the reporter and claims there’s “some stuff about her as an individual that will make you think differently,” according to the Standard. He declined to elaborate.

The faults of feminism (especially if you’re a dude): Where did this hook-up culture come from that has been at the crux of a lot of the criticism Tinder has faced since its inception? Rad has an idea: feminism. The CEO said feminism has “led to” today’s hookup culture, because women are more independent, and that leads to both parties being more sexually active. It most certainly is “not because of Tinder,” he said.

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